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momwithareadingproblem 's review for:
The Brontë Plot
by Katherine Reay
I received an eARC of this book from Thomas Nelson via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of this review.
The Brontë Plot by Katherine Reay left me with mixed feelings. There were some aspects of the story I really enjoyed and others not so much.
Lucy Alling is an ordinary girl with the propensity for telling tall tales.* When it’s discovered that the rare books she sales are not so rare as they are forged, she finds herself lost. She’s let down the only people who seem to care about her: her boss and her boyfriend. When the opportunity to go to London presents itself, she takes it. Lucy is a bit hard to like, but at the same time I didn’t dislike her either. Unfortunately for me, she was a flat character with little to hold my attention.
*This is just a fancy way of saying she lies….a lot!
The plot was all over the place. Lucy goes to London with her ex-boyfriend’s wealthy grandmother Helen as a sales consultant. Helen reveals a bit about how Lucy’s past intertwines with her own and the two set off on an adventure. For Lucy this adventure is about finding closure and making a new start. She wants to be good, desperately so, but she finds herself lying constantly. She lies to make others feel better or to the benefit of those she cares about it. It’s a real problem for her and one she finds herself struggling with as the book goes on. It disgusts her and I had a hard time sympathizing with her when things started going bad, because honestly she did it to herself.
What I enjoyed were the fun facts about London and the Lake District that were interspersed throughout the novel. This made for a fun read, one that I enjoyed trying to look up and find on my own. Like Reay’s other novels, this book centers on the Brontë sisters, their real life struggles and their characters. These are seamlessly intertwined into the story.
Overall the book was just okay for me which was disappointing. If you enjoy contemporary, women’s fiction with some history thrown in for fun, I suggest you take a look at this book. It may be for you, it wasn’t for me.
The Brontë Plot by Katherine Reay left me with mixed feelings. There were some aspects of the story I really enjoyed and others not so much.
Lucy Alling is an ordinary girl with the propensity for telling tall tales.* When it’s discovered that the rare books she sales are not so rare as they are forged, she finds herself lost. She’s let down the only people who seem to care about her: her boss and her boyfriend. When the opportunity to go to London presents itself, she takes it. Lucy is a bit hard to like, but at the same time I didn’t dislike her either. Unfortunately for me, she was a flat character with little to hold my attention.
*This is just a fancy way of saying she lies….a lot!
The plot was all over the place. Lucy goes to London with her ex-boyfriend’s wealthy grandmother Helen as a sales consultant. Helen reveals a bit about how Lucy’s past intertwines with her own and the two set off on an adventure. For Lucy this adventure is about finding closure and making a new start. She wants to be good, desperately so, but she finds herself lying constantly. She lies to make others feel better or to the benefit of those she cares about it. It’s a real problem for her and one she finds herself struggling with as the book goes on. It disgusts her and I had a hard time sympathizing with her when things started going bad, because honestly she did it to herself.
What I enjoyed were the fun facts about London and the Lake District that were interspersed throughout the novel. This made for a fun read, one that I enjoyed trying to look up and find on my own. Like Reay’s other novels, this book centers on the Brontë sisters, their real life struggles and their characters. These are seamlessly intertwined into the story.
Overall the book was just okay for me which was disappointing. If you enjoy contemporary, women’s fiction with some history thrown in for fun, I suggest you take a look at this book. It may be for you, it wasn’t for me.